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Ancient ‘war grave’ filled with 13,000-year-old battered corpses who killed each other over ‘climate change conflict’

CLIMATE change may have been a major factor in one of the oldest examples of human warfare.

New research suggests one of the oldest known war cemeteries may be full of people who died in several skirmishes over a lack of resources rather than one epic battle.

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The skeletons date back between 13,400 and 18,600 years ago[/caption]

Previously, the Jebel Sahaba cemetery in Sudan’s Nile River Valley has been viewed as a site full of people who died in one battle.

It’s one of the oldest examples of organised violence and dates back between 13,400 and 18,600 ago.

A new study, published in Scientific Reports, re-examined 61 skeletons at the site and found evidence of hundreds more injuries that were not fatal.

A quarter of the skeletons showed evidence of healed and unhealed wounds and likely lived through violent situations before their demise.

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Researchers found evidence of healed and unhealed wounds which suggest the individuals led violent lives[/caption]

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The bones are some of the oldest evidence of human warfare[/caption]

Researchers think arrows or spears caused a lot of the wounds and suggest outside groups were attacking each other.

Men, women and children were all attacked in the same way, which is in-keeping with the outsider attack theory.

Groups may have been attacking each other to raid resources or fight for areas of land.

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A team from the French National Centre for Scientific Research and the University of Toulouse – Jean Jaurès worked on the project[/caption]

The study authors write: “We dismiss the hypothesis that Jebel Sahaba reflects a single warfare event, with the new data supporting sporadic and recurrent episodes of inter-personal violence probably triggered by major climatic and environmental changes.”

Archaeologists first discovered the site in the 1960s and thought a brutal battle had occurred there.

We now know it dates back to the end of the last Ice Age, a time of great climate change when the surroundings of the Jebel Sahaba cemetery would have been cold and inhospitable in most areas.

The nearby Nile River Valley would have been a good spot to live with fresh fish, vegetation and water.

Unfortunately, the river is thought to have flutated in size, meaning there were only a few good places to live along it.

The new research suggests human ancestors fought over these places.

The authors concluded: “Territorial and environmental pressures triggered by climate changes are most probably responsible for these frequent conflicts between what appears to be culturally distinct Nile Valley semi-sedentary hunter-fisher-gatherers groups.”

A timeline of life on Earth

Here’s a brief history of life on our planet

  • 4.6billion years ago – the origin of Earth
  • 3.8billion years ago – first life appears on Earth
  • 2.1billion years ago – lifeforms made up of multiple cells evolve
  • 1.5billion years ago – eukaryotes, which are cells that contain a nucleus inside of their membranes, emerge
  • 550million years ago – first arthropods evolve
  • 530million years ago – first fish appear
  • 470million years ago – first land plants appear
  • 380million years ago – forests emerge on Earth
  • 370million years ago – first amphibians emerge from the water onto land
  • 320million years ago – earliest reptiles evolve
  • 230million years ago – dinosaurs evolve
  • 200million years ago – mammals appear
  • 150million years ago – earliest birds evolve
  • 130million years ago – first flowering plants
  • 100million years ago – earliest bees
  • 55million years ago – hares and rabbits appear
  • 30million years ago – first cats evolve
  • 20million years ago – great apes evolve
  • 7million years ago –first human ancestors appear
  • 2million years ago – Homo erectus appears
  • 300,000 years ago – Homo sapiens evolves
  • 50,000 years ago – Eurasia and Oceania colonised
  • 40,000 years ago – Neandethal extinction


In other news, hundreds of rock tombs have been unearthed by archaeologists in Egypt.

The mystery surrounding the age of the Cerne Abbas Giant may have finally been solved.

And, scuba divers found a huge 50 pound mammoth bone in a Florida river.


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